Thursday, April 28, 2011

COMEX loses 20% of it's Silver

A stunning story is developing wherein it appears the COMEX has 'lost' 20% of it's Silver, a story which has played a large part in Silver's price gaining over $3 yesterday.

First of all a refresher on what the COMEX is.

There used to be two exchanges in New York. The New York Mercantile Exchange and the Commodity Exchange, Inc (COMEX). In 2006 these two exchanged merged and became one. It is now the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) but is divided into two parts, the NYMEX Division upon which is traded such commodities as oil, gas, palladium and platinum and so forth, and the COMEX Division on which gold, silver copper and aluminum is traded. On this exchange are traded 'Future Contracts' of gold and silver.

The evolving big news started when our own Scotia Bank, Canada's largest bullion depository (and one of five total), reclassified a whopping 5.2 million ounces of silver from Registered to Eligible status.

Some like to say that basically "registered" is real silver and "eligible" is somewhat questionable silver.

The registered category of COMEX warehouse bullion stocks generally refers to gold and silver bars against which COMEX warehouse receipts are outstanding. The registered stocks are held for investment and not for commercial purposes. The registered category is the total pool of gold and silver available at any time to meet delivery requirements under expiring futures contracts or to establish initial futures contract positions through a transaction called exchange-for-physicals.

In comparison, the eligible category of COMEX warehouse bullion stocks generally refers to bullion held in the warehouses that meets the specifications of an acceptable COMEX bar (proper weight, size, purity and refiner) but does not have a COMEX warehouse receipt issued against it. For example, an investor might purchase several 1,000 oz. bars of silver from a dealer and then deliver the bars for allocated storage at a COMEX warehouse. This is a private arrangement and has nothing to do with the COMEX. Unless these bars are officially registered (the easiest way to do this is through the aforementioned exchange-for-physicals), they will remain in the eligible category until withdrawn from the warehouse by the investor.

Thus, the appropriate way to treat eligible COMEX warehouse bullion stocks is that they represent metal that could potentially be registered at some point in the future but cannot presently be used to make delivery under a short futures contract.

So when Scotia Bank moved 25% of it's silver from 'registered' to 'eligible', it took that silver out of the COMEX pool that was available to be delivered. And the 5.2 million ounces that ScotiaMocatta moved represents 5% of the previous COMEX supply of 44 million ounces.

The reason given last week was that: "due to a reporting reclassification, 5,287,142 t oz was moved from Registered to Eligible." It was explained that this does happen from time to time and was not unusual.

But the story does not end there.

In the past week two other depositories have done the same thing. HSBC and the Delaware Depository have 'reclassified' silver reserves which means that the total "physical" silver across the entire Comex universe has now plunged by almost 20%, or from 41 million ounces to 33 million ounces.

In the span of one week the COMEX has lost 20% of it's deliverable physical silver!

the change has been made to reflect a change in the reporting of metal from the Registered category to the Eligible category. This change reflects paper warrants that have yet to be converted to electronic form. The metal represented by these paper warrants, which will now be reported in the Eligible category, will continue to remain eligible for delivery against COMEX futures contracts provided holders of the paper warrants convert them to electronic form.

It's possible that it is nothing more than an odd, last minute paper to electronic contract conversion. And it is possible that it just so happened to mysteriously result in a 20% drop in the physical silver across the entire Comex universe. And it's also possible that it's a coincidence that this all comes at a time when silver is within cents of breaking the all time nominal high.

But you have to wonder... how many more such "warrants" exist in the system? There wouldn't happen to be enough that the COMEX would have to reclassify another 33,322,807 million ounces of registered silver, would it?

Could this be the real reason the COMEX struggled so much during the last delivery month to make good on silver contract deliveries of 4 million ounces when they supposedly had 41 million ounces in the system? Could it be that all of those 41 million ounces are nothing more than paper warrents?

The website FMXConnects has an interesting take on the whole situation.

FMX notes that Silver is the perfect product to buy if you genuinely think it is undervalued, want to de-dollarize your reserves, or just want to screw with the Banks who have become complacent over the years doing metals “carry trades” wherein they lease Silver, short it and take the proceeds to invest in something with a higher yield, betting they can get producers to sell to them when needing to cover.

If you have the money to do it, silver is the perfect product because:

One can control the Silver market with much less capital than gold.

Silver does not have currency status, gut Gold does. Every Central bank has gold in its reserves. None appears to have any have Silver, and

Silver is consumed while gold is essentially not. It's hard to create a squeeze in something that every ounce that has ever been mined still is in existence.

FMX wonders if the reclassifications are just the beginning's of the the big banks starting to get out of the way because someone bigger that the usual investor community with deep pockets and a will deeper than all the Bullion Banks combined has decided to de-dollarize their FX reserves.

4 comments:

Soon as you see prices drop on silver, you buy more, because its man made 100% sure. So when they lose control and they will lose control, the prices of silver will go to the roof. And the roof will be on fire!!! So get up and go buy some right now, may be just one are two silver maple leaf, be part of this fantastic ride to the top.

WELL I wish if you dont have some silver right now, run to scotiabank are rbc are goldcoinscanada, and buy some, its absolutely fantastic to see this event coming to reality and be part of it. We *in the knowing* where waiting for a long time, its now history in the making! Power to the people! ENJOY!

Followers

History of Central Banks

“The Federal Reserve is now a government within a government. It is totally out of control. Congress doesn't control it. It's funded by the banks and we either have constitutional government or we don't."

Disclaimer: The content on this site is provided as general information only and should not be taken as anything other than the personal opinions of the writer (s). It certainly should not be taken as investment advice. All site content, including advertisements, shall not be construed as a recommendation to buy or sell any security or financial instrument, or to participate in any particular trading or investment strategy. Nor shall it be interpreted as anything other than an opinion. The ideas expressed on this site are solely the opinions of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the opinions of sponsors or firms affiliated with the author(s). The author may or may not have a position in any company or advertiser referenced above. Any action that you take as a result of information, analysis, or advertisement on this site is ultimately your responsibility. Consult your investment adviser before making any investment decisions.

The author(s) of the posts on this site are not investment advisors and they do not offer investment advice. They try to provide some hopefully useful data with sources - especially concerning real estate - and then add their own analysis.

All the content on this website is solely an expression of the author's personal interests and is posted as free-of-charge opinion and commentary. Nothing here is intended as investment advice. If you seek investment advice, consult a registered, qualified investment advisor.